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“Sapere aude!”. Age of the Enlightenment. “Dare to know! Have the courage to use your own intelligence” Words of Immanuel Kant “Human ignorance is not caused by the lack of intelligence but from the “lack of determination and courage to use that intelligence without another’s guidance.”.
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“Sapere aude!” Age of the Enlightenment “Dare to know! Have the courage to use your own intelligence” Words of Immanuel Kant “Human ignorance is not caused by the lack of intelligence but from the “lack of determination and courage to use that intelligence without another’s guidance.”
Immanuel Kant • Q: “What Is Enlightenment?” • A: “Man’s release from his self-imposed tutelage” • In other words, Enlightenment = taking the training wheels off your thought process. • "There is nothing higher than reason."
Money Astronomy Medicine Trade Religion Law 3,700,00 B.C Australopithecus AD 1215 Magna Carta is signed AD 1500 AD 1789 French Revolution AD 570 AD 146 AD 476 AD 1250 AD 1914 WWI AD 1619 Jamestown colonists in America 2000 B.C World History Timeline AD 1799 Napoleon rules France Cro-Magnon Man IslamicEmpire AD 1940 WWII Greece AD 1643 Louis XIV builds Versailles in France Medieval Europe The Americas 33,000 B.C to 8000 B.C Africa Rome AD 570 Muhammed is born AD 30 Jesus is crucified Egypt & Mesopotamia (Fertile Crescent) AD 0 United States of America India China AD 1517Luther’s Reformation 8350 B.C Jericho built – 1st walled town 3200 B.C AD 1863 American Civil war AD 1776 America Declares Independence AD 1450 Gutenberg’s Printing Press 2500 B.C AD 2001 9/11 1500 BC 300 BC ? The Great Flood (Noah) AD 589 AD 550
Enlightenment Thinkers • Before the Enlightenment how did philosophers view human beings? • Men are born into classes, some are born to rule, some are born to be ruled • Men are inferior to God and have no hope of improving themselves • Men are incapable of understanding how the mysteries of the universe works
The Characteristics of the Enlightenment • Rationalism reason is the arbiter of all things. • Scientific Method • Mathematical analysis • Experimentation • Inductive reasoning. 3. Utilitarianism the greatest good for the greatest number. 4.Tolerance No opinion is worth burning your neighbor for.
Age of the Enlightenment The Renaissance may have opened the door to reason but had neither the courage nor the power to oppose the medieval concept of faith instead of reason. The leaders of the Enlightenment had that courage and power - Descartes in mathematics, Mozart in music, Rembrandt in painting, and Locke and Rousseau in politics. Revolution was in the air
Age of Scientific Revolution Summary The Scientific Revolution & the Enlightenment challenged and changed the way people thought about the world.
Enlightenment Thinkers • Philosophers influenced by Scientific Revolution • By using the Scientific Method and reason they hoped to figure out ways to improve conditions for people.
Enlightenment Thinkers • Beginning in the Enlightenment how did philosophers view human beings? • Men are born free and equal, and this fact should be accounted for in gov’t
Mozart • Classical style • Balance, symmetry • Preset forms • Structured emotion • Mathematical • Smooth flow: no“interruptions” • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y57AWXLMpGUhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Y4Fkxg7WcA • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1-TrAvp_xs • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qb_jQBgzU-I
Alternative: Romantic Music • Beethoven (1800)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G56fumJ7OoY • Chopin (Mid-1800s)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75x6DncZDgI • Rachmaninoff (1900s)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_6niD3DvW0
Rene Descartes Sums up Enlightenment philosophy PEOPLE MUST RELY ON THEIR OWN REASON TO UNDERSTAND LIFE AND THE NATURAL ORDER - AND EVERYTHING MUST BE JUDGED BY ASKING WHAT IS HUMANLY REASONABLE 1596-1650 I think therefore I am!
Religion’s Purpose Changes under the Enlightenment • As people used more and more of their reason to understand situations then they need the creator less and less • God might be useful for one's personal life but for science, politics, and gov't, human reason alone will suffice
Under the Enlightenment philosophy • Men should not use faith to justify reason Instead they should • Apply reason to the human world, not just the natural world • Examine and practice religious tolerance • Consider ideas of a democratic revolution
Voltaire • 1700s defender of human rights & reform • He is the philosopher who advocated religious tolerance and the separation of church and state Wait until you hear his story!
Voltaire • Separate church and state • His world imposed arrest and torture upon those citizens who expressed opinions that stood in opposition to the prevailing religious, social, and political views Wait until you hear his story!
Voltaire 1700s • What happened to Voltaire to make him want to separate church and state? • He was a good Catholic who felt God was a conscious intelligence that designed the world (that was enough for censure from the Roman Catholic Church; it was heresy) • Church said horrendous earthquake in 1755 was God's judgment on the French people “9-11 was God’s punishment on us because of all the homosexuals” Jerry Falwell
Voltaire • Voltaire believed passionately in the need to reform society and to reform the church but he found he could not influence the king of France nor the church authorities so ....he turned to the common people, becoming THE LEADING DEFENDER OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE NEED TO CHANGE SOCIETY • he flooded Europe with political pamphlets, novels, poems, etc. • he criticized the Bible and organized religion which he thought was used to crush any new ideas and used to continue erroneous beliefs in superstition
Voltaire’s “Wisdom” • Every man is guilty of all the good he didn’t do. • God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh. • If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. • It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong. • Love truth and pardon error.
Hobbes 100 years before Voltaire there was a philosopher named Hobbes who wrote a book called Leviathan
Hobbes • Years of nasty religious wars and nasty English civil war (500,000 dead) • Man in the world is a nasty and brutal beast. • He is ruled by selfish interest • Society is not safe http://assets.nydailynews.com/img/2008/11/12/alg_gears.jpg
Hobbes 1600s • Hobbes introduced the organizing principle of the social contract(don’t confuse this with another later book called the Social Contract) • SOCIAL CONTRACT says that individual people give up some of their freedoms/liberties in exchange for the protection and benefits of the group • Crucial becauseaccording to this contract good and evil are no longer considered in absolute terms, right and wrong are simply determined by the collective decision • He believes an absolute monarchy is necessary for the greater good and safety. An absolute monarchy is the best form of gov’t because it ensures everyone is protected and safe from the evil in all men
Hobbes 1600s • The idea that there is a contract between the rulers and the people will hold… • Can you see how this will change the way people think?
Hobbes 1600s Hobbes wrote Leviathan the 1600s 100 years later another writer will expand on the idea of a social contract…and his ideas will cause the world to explode Jean Jacques Rousseau, 1700s Book: The Social Contract
Rousseau 1700s Rousseau believes: • Man in nature is a noble savage • His argument: The Enlightenment's emphasis on reason and science had caused people to lose more freedom than they gained
Rousseau 1700s • His belief: people should have absolute freedom - freedom not just from culture but from authority of any kind ...this means that for Rousseau - the individual became the center of the universe
Rousseau 1700s Conclusion individual freedom only secure if there was a "general will" - - this way people would have peer pressure to do the right thing and treat everyone equal
Rousseau’s Philosophy • Concept of the “General Will.” • Only those who make their own laws are free. • Virtuous citizens will agree, become one. • A discussion among the virtuous will yield unity. • Dissenters are “forced to be free.” • General Will = law + freedom!
Third Social Contract Thinker John Locke He believes: • The people are sovereign - the right to rule and the power lies within the common man - by natural law • Monarchs are not chosen by God • The purpose of a gov’t is to protect man’s right to life, liberty , and property
John Locke’s Philosophy • There are certain natural rights that are endowed by God to all human beings. • life, liberty, property! • The doctrine of the Divine Right of Kings was nonsense. • He favored a republic as the best form of government.
1759-1797 Mary Wollstonecraft British 1st Feminist Philosopher A Vindication for the Rights of Women she argues that women are not naturally inferior to men, but appear to be only because they lack education. She suggests that both men and women should be treated as rational beings and imagines a social order founded on reason.
1713-1784 French Denis Diderot Wrote the Encyclopedia show the dependence of men's ideas on their five senses. The work sought to bring together all knowledge of the time and condense this information for all to use. MAXIMUM KNOWLEDGE An encyclopedia would give the layman an ability to reason and use knowledge to better themselves;
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) • Wrote Common Sense, 1776Invents term Age of REASON • It is right for man to revolt against an improper gov’t • Man’s rights are eternal and unchanging!
Enlightenment Thinkers • Adam Smith created idea of laissez-faire economics. (“Hands Off”) • He wroteThe Wealth of Nations • When it comes to the economy then gov’t should do nothing. • Natural forces of economy - supply and demand - should work freely. • Ex: gov’t should protect people from invasion by enemy but not from poverty.
Thomas Jefferson1743-1825 • Farmer (unsuccessful), Lawyer, Congressman, Governor, Ambassador, Secretary of State, V.P. and 3rd President, • Wrote the most famous 36 words in history.. We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government • Wished to be remembered for: • Declaration of Independence • Religious Freedom • University of Virginia